Detroit Diesel Series 53

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Production1957–1995
ConfigurationMulti-cylinder,
inline and V-type
Displacement53 cu in (0.9 L)
(per cylinder)
Series 53
Overview
ManufacturerDetroit Diesel
Production1957–1995
Layout
ConfigurationMulti-cylinder,
inline and V-type
Displacement53 cu in (0.9 L)
(per cylinder)
Cylinder bore3+78 in (98 mm)
Piston stroke4+12 in (114 mm)
Cylinder block materialCast iron
ValvetrainPushrod-operated 2 or
4 valves per cyl.
Compression ratio
    • 17.0:1 (N/A)
    • 18.7:1 (Turbo)
    • 21.0:1 ("N"ew)
Combustion
TurbochargerOn some versions
Fuel systemUnit fuel injection
Fuel typeDiesel
Cooling systemWater-cooled
Output
Power output98–233 hp (73–174 kW)
Torque output205–568 lb⋅ft (278–770 N⋅m)
Dimensions
Length33–40 in (840–1,020 mm)
Width27–40 in (690–1,020 mm)
Height35–41 in (890–1,040 mm)
Dry weight965–1,695 lb (438–769 kg)
Chronology
PredecessorSeries 71
SuccessorSeries 50

The Detroit Diesel Series 53 is a two-stroke diesel engine series, available in both inline and V configurations, manufactured by Detroit Diesel as a more compact alternative to the older Series 71 for medium and heavy duty trucks. The number 53 refers to the nominal swept displacement per cylinder in cubic inches.

Inline models included two, three, and four cylinders, and the V-types six and eight cylinders.

The Series 53 was introduced in 1957; in 1961, the 4-53 and 6V-53 were introduced as options for the 1962 model year Chevrolet-branded medium and heavy duty trucks.[1]:64

Production of Series 53 engines ended in the 1990s along with other two-stroke Detroit Diesel designs, as tightening emissions regulations could not be met with their design.[2]

Design

Variants

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI